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Fukushima fish found with 180 times legal limit of radioactive cesium

The file photo shows fishermen boiling brown seaweed at the port of Minamisanriku, nearly a year after the March 11 tsunami hit the northeastern Japanese town. (Photo by AP)

A Japanese electric utility holding company, which operated the crippled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant, says a fish caught near the disaster-hit site in May contained levels of radioactive cesium that are 180 times Japan’s safety limit.

Tokyo Electric Power Company Holdings Inc (Tepco) said on Monday that  black rockfish living near drainage outlets at the nuclear plant which was caught on May 18 had 18,000 becquerels per kilogram of cesium-137, compared with the legal maximum level of 100 becquerels per kilogram.

The company also confirmed that a total of 44 fish with cesium levels above 100 becquerels per kg have been found in the Fukushima plant port between May 2022 and May 2023, with 90 percent of those caught in or near the inner breakwater.  

It said rainwater from the areas around reactors one, two and three, which melted down during the 2011 disaster, flows into the inner breakwater where the rockfish was caught in May.

According to Tepco, cesium concentration in the sediment from the seabed in the inner breakwater measures more than 100,000 becquerels per kg.

“Since contaminated water flowed into the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power station port immediately after the accident, Tepco has periodically removed fish from inside the port since 2012 using fishnets that have been installed to prevent the fish from escaping the port,” the company said.

Regular monitoring of fish from the inner breakwater had been suspended after nets were installed in January 2016 to keep potentially contaminated fish inside the area.

However, Tepco said, “when a black rockfish with radioactive concentrations that exceed regulatory standards was caught off the coast of Soma [about 50km north of the plant] in January 2022, we began sampling again within this area in conjunction with the installation of more nets to prevent fish from leaving the port.”

The company further reiterated that it is confident “the impact on the public and environment will be minuscule” amid growing concerns around the water discharge.

The Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant suffered multiple nuclear meltdowns after a 2011 earthquake and tsunami.

The Japanese government has decided to release some 1.3 million cubic meters contaminated water from the destroyed plant into the sea next month.

The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) has approved the operation, saying Japan's emissions program would have negligible impacts on the environment.

However, the decision has sparked concerns among neighboring countries in the region.

Hong Kong has threatened to ban food imports from 10 Japanese prefectures if the water release goes ahead as planned.

China, the largest purchaser of Japan's seafood exports, has already said it will continuously strengthen the detection and monitoring of radioactive materials to ensure the safety of food imported from Japan in a food ban from 10 prefectures.

Beijing said the move was to prevent the export of radioactively contaminated Japanese food to China and protect the food safety of Chinese consumers' imports.

South Korea has already stepped up radiation tests of food imports from Japan as well.

Shipments of black rockfish caught off Fukushima prefecture were suspended in February 2022 after the radiation was detected and have yet to resume.

The high radioactivity levels found in the tested specimen led authorities to believe it had escaped from the nuclear plant’s port. All species of seafood from the areas around the plant are regularly monitored for radioactivity.


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